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Kazimierz Badowski

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Iridescent (talk | contribs) at 17:04, 9 April 2020 (Career: Cleanup and typo fixing, typo(s) fixed: 1962-1964 → 1962–1964). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Kazimierz Badowski (August 15, 1907, Regów Stary - July 6, 1990) was a leading Polish Communist activist.

Career

Working as a docker in Gdańsk, he rose through the ranks of the trade union movement to become a key figure in the Communist Party of Poland. In 1925, he left the party in the face of what he saw as an increasingly Stalinist ideological outlook. He became a leading Polish Trotskyist, founding the International Revolutionary Current, an informal network of various anti-Stalinist, Trotskyist and other Marxist organisations. He was able to survive all of the Nazi's concentration camps, only to be imprisoned by Stalin again the early 1950s and again from 1962–1964.

He was a keen Esperantist and strongly promoted the Esperanto language as part of the Trotskyist movement.

He died in 1990, living his later years paralysed and unable to communicate.